Equanimity: The foundation for bodhicitta
46 Middle-Length Lamrim
Part of a series of weekly teachings on Lama Tsongkhapa's Middle-Length Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment.
- Recitations
- Meditation: Compassion is important in the beginning, middle and end
- No one lacks the seed of compassion
- Immeasurable compassion, great compassion, and the great resolve
- Laying the foundation for the awakening mind
- The order of the meditation on equanimity
- All sentient beings are equal in wanting happiness and not wanting suffering
- Friends, enemies and strangers change quickly
- The conventional reality of friends and enemies
- Questions and comments on equanimity
- Developing equanimity in the monastic community
- What is the role of the neutrality
- Seeing others as dependent arisings
- Seeing friends and enemies is subjective
- Equanimity and our relationship to our family and friends
Venerable Sangye Khadro
California-born, Venerable Sangye Khadro ordained as a Buddhist nun at Kopan Monastery in 1974 and is a longtime friend and colleague of Abbey founder Venerable Thubten Chodron. She took bhikshuni (full) ordination in 1988. While studying at Nalanda Monastery in France in the 1980s, she helped to start the Dorje Pamo Nunnery, along with Venerable Chodron. Venerable Sangye Khadro has studied with many Buddhist masters including Lama Zopa Rinpoche, Lama Yeshe, His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Geshe Ngawang Dhargyey, and Khensur Jampa Tegchok. At her teachers’ request, she began teaching in 1980 and has since taught in countries around the world, occasionally taking time off for personal retreats. She served as resident teacher in Buddha House, Australia, Amitabha Buddhist Centre in Singapore, and the FPMT centre in Denmark. From 2008-2015, she followed the Masters Program at the Lama Tsong Khapa Institute in Italy. Venerable has authored a number books found here, including the best-selling How to Meditate. She has taught at Sravasti Abbey since 2017 and is now a full-time resident.